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It's got to get a whole lot better before I love this show. Right now it's a poor man's imitation of Alias with forgettable plots and acting, but I'll hang in to see if it gets better. Sendhil Ramamurthy is an afterthought at this point, not sure why they brought him in and Piper is just not compelling to watch so far.

I'm still trying to figure out what happened in the final gun fight. How did the Mossad agent kill 4 armed men at point blank range after awakening from a car crash? I don't think even Jack Bauer could have pulled that off. Well, maybe with his invisibility hoody on he could have. Did the bad guys even shoot once? Really odd editing there. And why did the bad guys' blood look like powder? Really bad effects there. I think this scene ruined a good episode. Nice chemistry between the agents.

Wasnt a horrible episode, but wasnt great either....I really prefered Oded Fehr in Sleeper Cell IMO he did a great job on that show .....Some of the cuts can get a little weird, but besides that Im along for the ride for now...

In Alias, Sydney Bristow was "special"... and that's why both sides kept trying to recruit her.

In Covert Affairs, it seems like she is just a rookie who was put into the field too soon... and the reason for that isn't because she is special, but rather because she happened to cross paths with someone the CIA wants to find.

So she may or may not turn out to be a "special" agent... for now she is a convenient agent it would seem...

So far... this show is just a "filler". I record it to watch when nothing else is on.

I find it much like Leverage and several other shows. I have multiple episodes collecting dust on my DVR. Especially now that I stream via Netflix (a lot of US and overseas TV series more so than movies) it isn't worthwhile to dedicate viewing time to them. I'll occasionally use them as background material so I haven't given up completely just yet.

I realize this is Hollywood with creative license and all that, but does anyone else think it's ok for the CIA to conduct covert ops on American soil in this show? I don't, and I think it's specifically against the law (not sure about that though).

Just wondering. It kind of kills any semblance of realism to see this, but maybe I just don't know what they're sanctioned to do.

She only had the Irish accent in the Pilot episode. They nixed it in the 2nd episode. No doubt the focus groups or the network didn't like it in the pilot, so they wrote it out.

I always found it odd that 'Burn Notice' has the character of an Irish girl being played by a real Irish girl but without an Irish accent. She sounded lovely in the pilot, as I recall. Hard to believe anybody, even a clueless network executive, thought that was a good idea. Why bother casting this woman in the first place? And then I remember about the tragic shortage of attractive young American actors in Hollywood and how it's become necessary to import them from Britain and Australia to fill the cast lists of American TV shows.

The family subplot is a real drag to the show. Every time it comes up it feels like a real reach to try to hook in a female audience. There has to be a better way to show the lead character's softer side with going back to this bad subplot.

Really? The only thing I could think about was her mutilated face, and how she was barely recognizable. She really was a beautiful woman once. Too bad we'll never see her be an older, beautiful woman.

Yeah, Holly's cosmetic surgery was an unfortunate choice for her. Honestly, I didn't recognize her in the first couple of scenes. Worse, the guy who played her senator husband had, hands down, the worst southern accent I can recall. On the plus side, though, I thought that this week's episode told a thoughtful and interesting story. It intrigued me from beginning to end. My attitude may have been helped by the appearance of the lovely and appealing Anna Camp. I loved her on True Blood.

Yeah, Holly's cosmetic surgery was an unfortunate choice for her. Honestly, I didn't recognize her in the first couple of scenes. Worse, the guy who played her senator husband had, hands down, the worst southern accent I can recall. On the plus side, though, I thought that this week's episode told a thoughtful and interesting story. It intrigued me from beginning to end. My attitude may have been helped by the appearance of the lovely and appealing Anna Camp. I loved her on True Blood.

DW Moffat does a better southern accent (it's more subtle) on "Friday Night Lights". I'm not sure why he or the director felt he had to do it differently for the Florida Senator character.

Summer Eye candy, and that's about it... The fact that she doesn't carry a gun, and gets into shoot-outs without getting hit....Come on...
Decent episode last night, the Tennis player was pretty hot...see 1st statement...